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tv   Bloombergs Studio 1.0  Bloomberg  January 14, 2018 8:30am-9:00am EST

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emily: it has been nearly six years since tim cook took over from apple's iconic cofounder steve jobs. and each year, the company becomes more cook's own. he has unveiled apple watch and apple music. he pulled off the largest acquisition and apple's history, buying beats. he has taken on issues like the environment, philanthropy, equality, and education. he stood up to president obama on user privacy and maintains a dialogue with president trump, despite the disagreement on climate change. now, as iphone sales plateau, questions remain about where the big innovation at apple is going to come from. we sat down with cook at apple's
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annual developers conference as he stakes out new territory for the company's future. from tv to cars and apples are's category in years, a smart speaker called home pod, a direct challenge to amazon and google. on this edition of "bloomberg: studio 1.0," apple ceo tim cook. ♪ emily: tim, thank you so much for joining us. it is really a pleasure to be here. tim: it is great to see you again, and unbelievable to be here, honestly. emily: let's start with the new smart speaker. why should people buy homepod over amazon echo or google home at this price? tim: what we tried to do is we built something that is a breakthrough speaker first. and so, music is deep in our dna, dating back to itunes and ipod. and so, we wanted something that, number one, sounded unbelievable. of course, it does a lot of other things, right? and all those are important as well, but we wanted a high
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quality audio experience as a well. emily: you are very focused on how this could reinvent music in the home. tim: yeah. emily: what about these other things? will i be able to make a phone call, call a car, order groceries? tim: there are a lot of things you can do with it. you know, one of the advantages we have is that there are a lot of things that siri knows how to do from the phone. and so we will start with a patch of those, and then you can bet that there is a nice follow-on activity there as well. emily: so let's talk about e-commerce. e-commerce is very important to these devices. i can order paper towels on my amazon echo. does this tell us something about apple's aspirations in retail? tim: no, i wouldn't read into it in that regard. what i would read into it is apple is a company that deeply
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cares about music and wants to deliver a great audio experience from the home. we feel like we reinvented it in the portable player area, and we think we can reinvent it in the home as well. and we know that people want a speaker now to do more than that, and obviously we want a speaker to do more than that, and so we are sort of combining what has been thought of to be two distinctly different things until now. emily: how long have you been working on this? tim: multiple years. and so, the underlying technology in here is something to behold, and to get the experience that we wanted at the quality we wanted -- you know, like apple products in general take multiple years to do, starting from the core technology and then building up
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to the product. emily: you have people out there saying, finally, what took so long? tim: you know, for us, it has never been about being first to anything. if you think back, we didn't have the first mp3 player. we didn't have the first smartphone. we didn't have the first tablet. there was a tablet shipping a decade before. very few people used it. arguably, we shipped the first modern mp3 player, the first modern smartphone, the first modern tablet, but we weren't first in any of those. and so, for us, it's not about being first. it's about being the best. emily: it is the 10th anniversary of the iphone. you have unveiled the new ios 11. what does that tell us about what is next? tim: i can tell you ios 11 is unbelievable. and both for iphone and for ipad, there are incredible things in it from peer-to-peer payments. it is the biggest ipad release ever. and an area that i have great personal excitement -- i am excited about all of it, but i am incredibly excited about ar. and as we get this developer release out in the hands of the and developers, we will have the
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largest augmented reality platform in the world. emily: you talked a lot about ar and vr with regards to developers, but what about consumers? when will consumers see an apple ar product? tim: with a core technology, and as a platform owner, the first thing -- and arguably in some ways the most important -- is to build the foundation. and then from that foundation, you can do many things off of it, but first you have to have a really solid foundation. emily: peter thiel said that he believes that innovation in smartphones is over. are the days of quantum leaps in smartphone innovation over, or are there more quantum leaps to come? tim: you know, i don't agree with that view at all. the things that drive quantum leaps is the core technology. and when i think about all of the things that are going to change from a core technology point of view in the future, i think we are just getting started. and so i am incredibly excited.
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and clearly, there is nothing that -- i think virtually anybody would say is going to replace the smartphone anytime soon. and you know, as time has gone on, the smartphone has become more important to people's lives. when it started, the phone call was still a dominant reason for having it. now, if you look at what people are doing on smartphones, it is a minor piece of what a phone is now. and so when i look at that and sort of the health kit and what that has done in terms of getting people's health data, car play, the use of it in the car. i am controlling all of my house with siri using the iphone. and so i think about all of these things, the usage of it, now, it is something that you just don't leave home without your iphone. so no, i think it is in the
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early stages, still. i don't see it in that light at all. emily: controlling your home with your device is still a fairly niche behavior. when do you see that becoming more mainstream? tim: i think it is going to become more mainstream this year, honestly, because we built it into ios 10. after that, you saw more and more accessories coming to the market that were home kit enabled, and it is super easy to set up. we just made it easier for accessory vendors to be compatible with home kit, because you now can use software encryption. you don't have to actually have hardware encryption to go. so i think that also unleashes even more accessory guys to join. and i think people are increasingly going to want to automate different parts of their home. i wouldn't live without it at this point, right? it's one of those things that you go, wow, how could i have
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ever done that in a different manner? emily: in the past you said, the ipad is the clearest expression for our vision of the future of personal computing. mac sales are holding steady, ipad sales continue to fall. why is that? tim: you know, we make both, and i am happy with whatever people choose to buy. some people will only buy mac. some people only buy an ipad. and many of us want both. -- youand many of us want both. -- both, honestly. and so what we have tried to do with the ipad is to bring even more productivity features to it. i think a lot of people may be buying pcs or something will look at this and decide they would rather have an ipad pro, and that is great.
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i think people that have an ipad will want an upgrade. but the mac remains very important to us, so i see it as both of them are computing devices, and we are going to keep investing in both, because we think both have a great future. one of the reasons that ipad on the surface -- just look at the numbers, the units are going down? keep in mind that the ipad mini came out at a point in time that smartphones were fairly small. people had 3.5-inch, maybe 4-inch screens on their smartphone, and so one of the things you are seeing is a natural move to a smartphone not taking all of that market, but taking a piece of it, and obviously we are ok with that, too. the 7 plus has been phenomenal. we have seen growth rates there that have shocked us. ♪ emily: you called president trump and urged him not to pull out of paris. tim: i did, yes. emily: he didn't listen. what does that mean for your relationship with the president? ♪ emily: you have been engaged
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emily: you have been engaged with this white house. you called president trump and urged him not to pull out of paris. tim: i did, yes. emily: he didn't listen. what does that mean for your relationship with the president? tim: actually, i would say it a little different. i think he did listen to me. he didn't decide what i wanted him to decide, and i think he decided wrong. i think it is not in the best interest of the united states what he decided. but in terms of -- you know, the way that i look at this thing -- and do you interact with politicians or do you not? my view is that first and foremost, things are about -- can you help your country? and if you can help your country and you do that by interacting, then you do it. that country eclipses politics.
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and so, you know, if there is something that we can work together that helps people in the united states, then of course we would do it. emily: you have other people that are leaving the table though, like bob iger, like elon musk. is the president jeopardizing his relationship with one of his key constituencies, the business community? tim: i would differentiate leaving a council and advising in a way that you think can help him in a way that you think can help our country. i think the first one is a judgment call that people make. i didn't join a council, and so it is not a decision i had to make, but i understand both sides of that. but advising on something that you believe will help america, i think is a requirement as a ceo. you definitely do that. and you know if, honestly, if i get the chance to go pitch the paris agreement again, i'm going
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to do it again. because i think it's very important that we engage to fight climate change on a global who basis. this isn't something where you can solve it country by country. it requires a global action. emissions created in one country affect another. so, you know, it is something we feel strongly about, and i wanted to do every single thing that we could do to tell how important it was to stay in the agreement. and unfortunately, he decided something different. emily: why didn't you join a council? tim: why didn't i? because -- two reasons. one, my primary job is being the ceo of the company. and i spend the bulk of my waking hours doing that. and i do so willingly, because i love the company and the people
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in it. and so traveling back east isn't something that i look forward to doing except when i need to do. secondly, i don't find these councils in general and committees to be terribly productive. but it wasn't about not wanting to advise on something where i thought that we could help or we had a point of view that should be heard. and so i am doing the latter. i can't imagine a situation where i would not do the latter because i think it is in the best interest of america to do it. and i am first and foremost an american. emily: on repatriation, this is an issue that would be important to apple, and potentially important to the country. how would you like a repatriation bill to be structured? tim: in our of view, it should be a deemed repatriation. this means it should be a required pact.
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and so you are not asking the people that have had earnings from their international subsidiaries if they would like to bring back money. you are saying that you must pay the government x percent now or over some period of time. and i think -- my own advice would be is that the u.s. use is that money for a significant infrastructure spend in the u.s., because it creates jobs. and i think there's few people that would argue that we don't need an investment in america, and so that is what i think should be done. and i think it should have been done years ago, but it hasn't. and so, you know, tomorrow is good. emily: you have made it clear that the privacy of apple users is of utmost importance to you. even as terror attacks continue to happen around the world. does the new ios strengthen user security and privacy? tim: these terrorist attacks --
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first of all, our heart goes out to everyone affected by them. they are horrendous, and the u.k., for us, we have been in the u.k. pretty much the whole length of time for our company. and it feels like they are a neighbor. we have thousands of employees is there, and so our heart goes out. and so what do we do with helping with this? we have done one thing since the beginning of the app store, is we curate the app store. we don't want hate speech on there. we do not want these kind of recruiting kind of things on there. and so we have tried to be very careful from the beginning about not having that stuff on there. i am not saying we will never make a mistake, but actually i don't know of a case where something has gotten through.
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we have also been cooperating with the u.k. government, not only in law enforcement kind of matters, but on some of the attacks. and i cannot speak in detail about that. but in cases where we had information and they have gone through the lawful process, we not just give it, but we do it very, very promptly. i think -- i would hope, that they would say that we have been cooperating well. and i think, you know, that there is some valuable information. and so, i think there is a misunderstanding about -- encryption doesn't mean there is no information, right? because likely, metadata exists. and metadata, if you are putting
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together a profile, is very important. emily: can we assume that apple is always working to make encryption even stronger? tim: the reality is that the cyberattacks on people and governments and -- i mean, it is happening left and right everywhere -- these affect your safety, your security. so it is not just privacy. it is not privacy versus security. it is privacy and security versus security. and so we are always working to try to stay one step ahead of these hackers that, frankly speaking, have gone from the guy in the basement that is a kind of hobbyist to a sophisticated enterprise. and it takes all that we can do to do it, and we do not think our users should have to think through all of this stuff. it is not practical for people, and so we try to stand up for users and stay one step ahead of these guys. ♪m
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emily: you have said cars are an area ripe for disruption. how important is it that apple not miss out on cars? ♪ emily: let's talk about the
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world's second-biggest economy, china. tim: yeah. emily: how does apple navigate what seems to be uncertain economic and political waters there? tim: china, for us, we make all of our decisions for the long-term. and so we are not investing for next quarter or next year. we are thinking about many, many years out. and as i stand back and look at china, i see mega-trends there that make china an incredible market, and i don't mean just a market to sell in. i also mean a market for application developers. we have 1.5 million application developers in china now. probably closer to 2 million.
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so it's an incredible marketplace for talent and in terms of the size of the marketplace. and so this -- the short-term kinds of economic moves up and down, i don't get too excited about. emily: how realistic is it to expect that double-digit growth for apple can continue in china? tim: well, it didn't continue last year. emily: are the days of double-digit growth over? tim: i think we will do better this quarter than we have the last several. that doesn't mean that we are growing double-digit or that we are going to grow, but it means a year-over-year comp over than the previous ones. i feel pretty good about that. iphone 7 is the most popular smartphone in china. iphone 7 plus is the third most popular smartphone in china. last year, the size of our business was almost $50 billion in greater china.
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and so we are going to stick at it, because i think china is a huge opportunity over time. emily: how would you characterize tim cook's apple versus steve jobs' apple? tim: well, i don't think about it very much. what would i say? i guess i would point out that steve's dna will always be the dna of apple, or it will be as long as i am ceo. and i think as long as anyone is, honestly. i think it is deeply embedded in the company, and we celebrate it. and it should be like that and it should stay like that. obviously, things evolve over time in some other areas, as they would have if he were sitting here interviewing with you today. there is clearly, i'm sure, some things, but that is probably a better question to ask somebody who worked for both of us. emily: you said cars are an area
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ripe for disruption. how important is it that apple not miss out on cars? tim: i think there is a major disruption looming there, not only for self-driving cars, but also the electrification piece. if you have driven an all-electric car, it is actually a marvelous experience. and it is a marvelous experience not to stop at the filling station or gas station or whatever you want to call it. and so -- plus, you have ridesharing on top of this, right? you've got kind of three vectors of change happening generally in the same timeframe. and so as we look at it, and what we are focusing on -- what we have talked about focusing on publicly is we are focusing on autonomous systems. clearly, one purpose of autonomous systems is self-driving cars. there are others. and we sort of see it as the mother of all ai projects. it is probably one of the most difficult ai projects actually to work on, and so, autonomy is something that is incredibly exciting for us, but we will see
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him where it takes us. we are not really saying from a product point of view what we will do, but we are being straightforward that it is a core technology that we view as very important. emily: you are working across so many different platforms, whether it's tv, the watch, the ipad, the mac, the phone. what do you see now as your vision for the future of personal computing across all of these platforms? tim: the great thing is they are all built on the same core technology, right? but we have thought through how they are used and the experience that is needed to get the best experience for the user in each of the cases.
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and so, out of that came watch os, tv os, ios, and mac os. we think that when you begin to merge, that the risk is the lowest common denominator kind of approach, and we are staying away from that. i know others that have a different view on that, but that is our view, and we are straightforward with it. emily: we will have to leave it there. apple ceo tim cook, thank you so much. tim: it is great to see you and spend time with you. ♪
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♪ abigail: coming up on "bloomberg best," the stories that shaped the week in business around the world. a report from china roils the bond market, but it may prove to be a passing storm. >> certainly, yields could hit 3%. abigail: another automaker faces cheating claims. earning season kicks off with results from big banks. the ecb releases the latest set of minutes. >> a rate hike in 2018 is too much to expect. 2019 is definitely in play. abigail: ubs ceo sergio ermotti shares of shares exclusive insight on the global economy. >> at least not as strong as we thought in 2017. abigail: plus, conversations with heavy hitter

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